Low-tech `blaster` nails sinus problem on the nose

Transcription

Low-tech `blaster` nails sinus problem on the nose
newsprint
Megan Licursi
Marketing Communications
QUALITIES OF LIFE
section 13, page 4.
SUNDAY, JUNE 17, 2007
Low-tech ‘blaster’ nails
sinus problem on the nose
T
he manufacturer calls its
product
the
SinuCleanse
Squeeze. Our tester dubbed it
"the noseblaster."
During a spring trip to
pollen-dense Nashville, the tester
found that the SinuCleanse
Squeeze - by which we refer, of
course, to the noseblaster offered temporary relief from
badly clogged sinuses.
The instructions are simple:
Fill the squeeze bottle with
lukewarm water, add one or two
packets of dry saline ingredients
(SinuCleanse comes with 30
packets), give the bottle a good
shake and then insert the tip of
the bottle into one nostril; gently
squeeze the solution up into one
nostril, then the other. This
procedure should be conducted,
of course, over a sink, preferably
in the privacy of one's bathroom.
Nasty stuff flowed freely from
our tester's nose, so we don't
advise trying this on a first date.
Fortunately, the tester is part of a
long-term happy relationship, so
when the sound of the
noseblaster in action brought to
mind the death throes of a small
mammal, it wasn't terribly offputting.
Another option in the
SinuCleanse system is a neti pot,
which works similarly to the
noseblaster except that the saline
solution is slowly poured into the
nostrils, with the head tilted just
so. Our tester turned his nose up
at the neti pot, preferring the
more satisfying action of the
noseblaster; he continues to use it
as needed back home in the
Chicago suburbs.
The active ingredients in the
dry saline packet are sodium
bicarbonate and sodium chloride,
also known as baking soda and
table salt. So you could mix up
your own saline combo, but our
tester likes the convenience of the
packets.
The two systems are available
at CVS Pharmacy and Walgreens
and online at sinucleanse.com.
SinuCleanse Squeeze lists for
$10.99 on the Web site, the
SinuCleanse Neti Pot for $14.99;
a box of 60 saline packets is
$7.99.
A reminder: If you opt to buy
the cleansing system locally, use
the official name: SinuCleanse
Squeeze. Asking for a noseblaster
might elicit some puzzled looks.
The SinuCleanse Squeeze is best used in privacy or only
around those who really love you, but what a relief.
By Denise Joyce
Tribune staff reporter
Megan Licursi Marketing Communications • 513.404.2545